Scoops of Rava Kichadi with veggies
The recipe follows -
Ingredients -
1) Fine Semolina - 1 cup
2) Onion - 1 big (thinly sliced)
3) Green Chilies - 2-3 (slit)
4) Ginger - 1" piece (julienned)
5) Potato - 1 (diced) (OPTIONAL - I omit this almost all the time.)
6) Frozen peas and carrots - 3/4ths of a cup (thawed)
7) Frozen Lima beans or French cut green beans - 1/2 cup (thawed)
8) Tomatoes - 1 big (diced) (Obviously, you need to wait until the Salmonella scare has passed!)
9) Turmeric - a small pinch
10) Cilantro - a handful (roughly chopped)
12) Water - 3.25 cups
13) Salt - to taste
For seasoning -
a) Oil - 2 tspns
b) Butter/Ghee - 1/2 or 1 tspn
c) Mustard seeds - 1 tspn
d) Cloves - 2
e) Cinnamon - 1" piece
f) Bengal gram Dal - 1 tbspn
g) Split Urad Dal - 1 tspn
h) Asafetida - a generous pinch
Method -
1) Dry roast the semolina in a pan on a medium flame until the granules acquire a light brown shade and keep aside.
2) In a deep pan, heat the oil and then add in the ghee. After both are heated through, toss in the seasoning ingredients c through h, one after another in the order listed above, always making sure none of them get charred.
3) The ginger and green chilies can be thrown in at this point and after a minute the onions go in too.
4) Fry till the onions are translucent and then the veggies listed in 5 through 8 can be added in. Sprinkle turmeric powder over this and then fry on a medium flame until the tomatoes start to turn mushy.
5) Pour the 3.25 cups of water and stir in salt. Cover and cook until the water starts gurgling.
6) Remove from heat and stir in the dry roasted cream of wheat adding a little at a time ensuring no lumps are formed.
7) Put the mixture back on a medium flame and cover and cook for 10-12 minutes until soft.
8) Garnish with cilantro and serve hot with any chutney of your choice.
Note - I am sure you must have figured out that the twist part was none other than the addition of the cloves and cinnamon. It really does add a lovely flavor and I'm sure you won't be disappointed. The consistency of the kichadi is quite different from that of the cream of wheat upma. A kichadi always needs to be mushy and soft with a glazed look to it.